Showing posts with label The Marx Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Marx Brothers. Show all posts
11/29/09
Groucho Lives!
9/1/09
The Mirror Scene
This is one of film comedy's most famous moments, from Duck Soup.
A quarter century later Harpo Marx redid the scene with Lucille Ball on I Love Lucy; except instead of Harpo aping Groucho, it was Lucy aping Harpo, until he caught her.
For a friend who recently asked me what a doppelganger was, witness.
A quarter century later Harpo Marx redid the scene with Lucille Ball on I Love Lucy; except instead of Harpo aping Groucho, it was Lucy aping Harpo, until he caught her.
For a friend who recently asked me what a doppelganger was, witness.
5/24/09
5/21/09
Marx Brothers Weirdness
A little levity:
3/11/09
The Beatles- Help!
I'd never seen this full movie, but watched it this afternoon. I've always felt the boys were overrated as a pop quartet, but still an essential band in rock history. I've seen A Hard Day's Night a few times and never thought much of it. This film is not as good. In fact, having grown up watching reruns of The Monkees tv show, I can say that while The Beatles made better music, The Monkees were far better comedians and actors. They could actually mix physical and verbal comedy along the lines of The Marx Bros.- the comedy team The Beatles are most compared to. The acting in this film, especially by the boys, is atrocious. There's no tale and no real reason for the film, save being a 90 minute commercial for the album.
The visuals of the film are superb but, in essence, this is the birth of the music video a generation before MTV (1965). I'll write a full review soon, but any positives you read about this film are likely just fans, not serious cineastes. The good thing is that two #2s from the great 1967 Patrick McGoohan tv series, The Prisoner, star in the film: Leo McKern and Patrick Cargill.
Here is one of their great tunes, though:
The visuals of the film are superb but, in essence, this is the birth of the music video a generation before MTV (1965). I'll write a full review soon, but any positives you read about this film are likely just fans, not serious cineastes. The good thing is that two #2s from the great 1967 Patrick McGoohan tv series, The Prisoner, star in the film: Leo McKern and Patrick Cargill.
Here is one of their great tunes, though:
Labels:
Help,
The Beatles,
The Marx Brothers,
The Monkees
1/28/09
Groucho and Company
This is just too cool. The Marx brothers film, Horse Feathers, is online. Granted, I think they are overrated- they should really be called Groucho and Company. But, free is free!
Here 'tis:
Here 'tis:
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